Don't Kill U.S. Employment Visas & EB-5 with S.386 / H.R.1044
Don't Kill U.S. Employment Visas & EB-5 with S.386 / H.R.1044
Why this petition matters
S.386/H.R.1044, Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act, is anything but fair as it will effectively kill the EB-5 program and all other employment-based categories. This would mean excluding essential skilled workers from all countries other than China and India, as those two countries dominate the visa backlog.
S.386/H.R.1044 would eliminate caps that prevent any one country from receiving more than 7% of green cards annually for high-skilled workers. These caps were put in place to guard against the monopolization of the green card process by a few larger countries. While eliminating the caps would reduce the backlog for nationals from India and China, it would shift that backlog onto nationals from the rest of the world—adding years of delays and effectively devastating both the EB-5 program and other employment-based visa categories. COVID-19 has created a juncture where an economic boost and job creation is critical, something the EB-5 Program is well situated and equipped to provide. EB-5 petitioners have invested $900,000-$1.8 million individually, billions of dollars annually, into our nation's economy at this tumultuous time. Rather than encouraging this foreign direct investment, elimination of the caps will create wait times for a minimum of 15 years for all existing and future EB-5 investors. This is simply outrageous.
Outside of the EB-5 Program, another consequence of this short-sighted bill would be to prevent highly skilled immigrants in high-need areas, such as health care and medical research, to be shut out of residency for well over a decade. At a time when we need America to remain competitive, we must be able to attract and retain the best and brightest wherever they may come from.
An alternate solution would be to provide more visas. S.386, as drafted, is a short-sighted workaround that would only further frustrate employment-based immigration.
Decision Makers
- Kevin CramerRepresentative
- Mike LeeU.S. Senator
- Kamala HarrisAttorney General
- Rob PortmanUS Senate - Ohio
- Kamala D. HarrisUS Senate - California